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Personally, I found the idea of an impossible singularity quite refreshing.
It does make sense that no matter how smart the system is, it still needs time to learn and master the environment.
So even an above-human artificial intelligence will not immediately cause singularity.

GNAT for LEGO MINDSTORMS NXT is a GPL port for the GNAT compilation system to the LEGO NXT robotic platform, designed to offer an educational platform for teaching and learning embedded systems development.

Founded in November 1992. UAsIPPR is a member of IAPR - International Association for Pattern Recognition.

The Ukrainian Association for Information Processing and Pattern Recognition is a voluntary public creative scientific organization which unites research teams of institutions, organizations as well as citizens of Ukraine on a voluntary basis and a community of interests to achieve the goal and tasks provided by the UAsIPPR Constitution.

Now UAsIPPR unites more than 75 researchers. It organizes international conferences, publishes their proceedings.

The Dallas Personal Robotics Group (DPRG), founded in June of 1984, is one of the US oldest special interest groups dedicated to the development and use of personal robotics. The DPRG is a 501(c)(3) not for profit educational organization. DPRG members are interested in autonomous robots, movie replica robots, vintage robots, robot and kinetic art, as well as just about anything involving electronics, technology, or science.

An Executive is responsible for task execution on-board an autonomous robot. TREX is a hybrid executive combining goal-driven and event-driven behavior in a unified framework based on temporal plans and temporal planning. TREX uses a single declarative programming language and shared runtime state for both deliberation and execution offering a seamless integration between planning and control. TREX also provides explicit support for compositional control which improves modularity, scalability, and robustness.

The Player Project creates Free Software that enables research in robot and sensor systems. The Player robot server is probably the most widely used robot control interface in the world. Its simulation backends, Stage and Gazebo, are also very widely used.

Released under the GNU General Public License, all code from the Player/Stage project is free to use, distribute and modify. Player is developed by an international team of robotics researchers and used at labs around the world.